CA32311 - IBA: Qualifying trade: Meaning of retail shop
The meaning of retail shop was considered in the case of
Kilmarnock Equitable Co-operative Society Ltd. v CIR 42TC675.
Kilmarnock's business included selling coal in paper bags, both
retail and wholesale. It constructed a building in which it
screened and packed the coal and claimed IBA on the grounds that
goods were subjected to a process in it. The company's claim
succeeded. In that case Lord Cameron said the purposes of a retail
shop are to enable the public to resort to a place where they may
see and purchase goods or materials by retail and to serve as a
place of exhibition and sale of a shopkeeper's wares.
The meaning of shop was also considered in various rating
cases. Those cases established that premises to which the public
has access for the purposes of having wants supplied or particular
services rendered are shops. This means that a building does not
have to be premises where goods are sold over the counter to be a
shop. For example, buildings occupied by laundrettes, banks,
undertakers, jobbing builders and shoe repairers are shops. Trade
customers are not the public and so a building that serves only
trade customers is not a retail shop. A wholesaler's premises are
not a retail shop if all the customers are trade customers. If,
however, the public are allowed to shop at a wholesaler's premises
it will be a retail shop even if most of the customers are trade
customers.
